Deep in the piece is some of the more interesting verbiage -- Set against the backdrop of divorce hearings, Jamie’s request for nearly $500,000 a month in support, and Frank’s claim his personal checking account balance had fallen to $167,000, the club made its first significant personnel decision of the offseason. It would not offer salary arbitration to left-hander Randy Wolf, an 11-game winner and the team’s de facto ace for much of the season. The Dodgers had refused to risk a one-year contract for Wolf, who might have drawn as much as $15 million. And they would not receive the two high draft picks if Wolf signed elsewhere, which he did. And they would not be on the hook for the two signing bonuses those picks would be due. Somewhat lost in the analysis was that the Dodgers really needed the pitching.As the offseason wore on, agents peddling free agents and general managers hoping to talk trade would contact the Dodgers and get the same message: We’re near our payroll limit. We don’t have the money. Thanks, but no thanks.“They have great core players, but no depth,” one agent observed. “They can’t fill in their team because they don’t have the money.”